QuickBooks Payroll: many Options, Complex Setup

Dissatisfied with your payroll service? QuickBooks processes employee data and paychecks –and can do so affordably — but can you manage the detail work required?

Those neatly-printed paychecks and paystubs and direct deposit slips that you distribute only hint at the Herculean effort it takes to calculate them. If you manage your own payroll inhouse, you know this well.

If you don’t, but you’d like more control over this complex element of accounting (and wouldn’t mind maybe saving some money), you have several options. We talked about Intuit Online Payroll last March as one.

Hesitant about moving sensitive financial data into the cloud? Intuit offers a handful of desktop-based options that integrate with QuickBooks:

Full Service Payroll. Intuit manages the entire payroll process, including setup (QuickBooks integration not required).

Subscription costs start at a base price of $25/month for Basic and progress to a minimum of $99/month for Full Service.

Time-Consuming Data Entry

Once you’ve set up your employee and company files, processing an actual payroll run isn’t difficult (unless you regularly encounter unusual situations). In the simplest possible cases, you just make sure that the correct pay period is selected, enter the number of hours worked and pay types for each applicable employee, and let QuickBooks do all of the calculations and create paychecks or direct deposit slips.

But the setup process itself can take a great deal of time, and it must be done absolutely accurately, since you’re dealing with employees’ livelihoods and external organizations like health insurance companies and tax agencies. You must manually enter details about:

Setup can be a lengthy, complicated procedure, and – understandably — prone to errors.

Our firm can help you make a sensible choice from these alternatives, or we can manage your payroll internally. Either way, we recommend that you consult with us before changing your method of compensating employees and submitting taxes. Serious payroll errors can result in hefty penalties and unhappy employees – or worse.